Phylogeny of the chelydrid turtles : a study of shared derived characters in the skull
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Phylogeny of the chelydrid turtles : a study of shared derived characters in the skull
- Publication date
- 1975
- Topics
- Snapping turtles, Turtles -- Classification, Reptiles -- Anatomy, Skull
- Publisher
- Chicago : Field Museum of Natural History
- Collection
- biodiversity; fieldiana
- Contributor
- University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Language
- English
- Volume
- Fieldiana, Geology, Vol.33, No.9
- Item Size
- 81.1M
The turtle genera Chelydra (Recent, North America), Macroclemys (Recent, North America), Platysternon (Recent, Asia), Protochelydra (Paleocene, North America), and Macrocephalochelys (Pliocene, Asia) are hypothesized as a strictly monophyletic group on the basis of a shared derived character study of the skull. The five genera are therefore placed in the Family Chelydridae. The primary characters used involved the degree of temporal and cheek emargination along with changes in bone size and shape in the skull roof. Protochelydra, with the most extensive emarginations is proposed as the primitive end of a morphocline series culminating in Platysternon, which has the least emarginate condition. Cranial diagnoses for the testudinoid families Chelydridae, Emydidae, and Testudinidae are included
Includes bibliographical references (p. 176-178)
The turtle genera Chelydra (Recent, North America), Macroclemys (Recent, North America), Platysternon (Recent, Asia), Protochelydra (Paleocene, North America), and Macrocephalochelys (Pliocene, Asia) are hypothesized as a strictly monophyletic group on the basis of a shared derived character study of the skull. The five genera are therefore placed in the Family Chelydridae. The primary characters used involved the degree of temporal and cheek emargination along with changes in bone size and shape in the skull roof. Protochelydra, with the most extensive emarginations is proposed as the primitive end of a morphocline series culminating in Platysternon, which has the least emarginate condition. Cranial diagnoses for the testudinoid families Chelydridae, Emydidae, and Testudinidae are included
Fieldiana series has been published as Geological Series by Field Columbian Museum (1895-1909) and Field Museum of Natural History (1909-1943), and as Fieldiana: Geology by Chicago Natural History Museum (1945-1966) and Field Museum of Natural History (1966-)
Includes bibliographical references (p. 176-178)
The turtle genera Chelydra (Recent, North America), Macroclemys (Recent, North America), Platysternon (Recent, Asia), Protochelydra (Paleocene, North America), and Macrocephalochelys (Pliocene, Asia) are hypothesized as a strictly monophyletic group on the basis of a shared derived character study of the skull. The five genera are therefore placed in the Family Chelydridae. The primary characters used involved the degree of temporal and cheek emargination along with changes in bone size and shape in the skull roof. Protochelydra, with the most extensive emarginations is proposed as the primitive end of a morphocline series culminating in Platysternon, which has the least emarginate condition. Cranial diagnoses for the testudinoid families Chelydridae, Emydidae, and Testudinidae are included
Fieldiana series has been published as Geological Series by Field Columbian Museum (1895-1909) and Field Museum of Natural History (1909-1943), and as Fieldiana: Geology by Chicago Natural History Museum (1945-1966) and Field Museum of Natural History (1966-)
- Addeddate
- 2007-12-11 03:20:01
- Call number
- 211095
- Camera
- 5D
- External-identifier
-
urn:oclc:record:1050846679
- Foldoutcount
- 0
- Identifier
- phylogenyofchely339gaff
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t8rb70w8f
- Lcamid
- null
- Lccn
- 7516540
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.37
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.21
- Openlibrary_edition
- OL7039816M
- Openlibrary_work
- OL4806643W
- Page_number_confidence
- 61
- Page_number_module_version
- 1.0.3
- Pages
- 40
- Ppi
- 400
- Rcamid
- null
- Scandate
- 20080114160721
- Scanner
- illi2
- Scanningcenter
- ill
- Worldcat (source edition)
- 1991971
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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